Dernière mise à jour : 24 août 2023

Mike Bond“Saving Paradise”United StatesUnited States

Mike Bond's “Saving Paradise”

The anti-wind Hawaii-based thriller is an action packed, must-read novel. It is now on sale as an e-book for only $0.99. All author royalties go to fighting industrial wind.

Mike Bond's “Saving Paradise”
Mike Bond's “Saving Paradise”
Get “Saving Paradise” for only $0.99

The anti-wind best-seller “Saving Paradise” helped to kill a huge industrial wind project in Hawaii and led to the defeat of pro-wind Governor Neil Abercrombie.

Please tell your contacts so they can consider sending “Saving Paradise” to fellow wind warriors and also to those who need to be educated on the subject. Written by best-selling novelist, wind warrior and international energy expert Mike Bond, “Saving Paradise” is an exciting and unforgettable condemnation of industrial wind and its political and environmental allies.

Mike Bond: Ten Ways to Kill Big Wind

In Hawaii, an industrial wind project that would have constructed ninety 42-story turbine towers across seventeen square miles of Molokai has been defeated by a determined two-year effort of the island’s residents.

In the process we learned many tactics, which I’ve tried to summarize below and are further described in “Saving Paradise”:

  1. Show wind projects for what they are: industrial. Not environmental, not green, not renewable, and cause no reductions in greenhouse gases or fossil fuel use, no long-term jobs and few short-term ones.
  2. Don’t be nice. These wind developers are your enemies: they want to destroy where you live, steal your money (property values), and are quite happy to literally drive you from your homes. They will lie, cheat, bribe, buy politicians, and do whatever else they can to win. They won’t be fair and you can’t trust them.
  3. Create a group and get your community behind you. Point out property value loss, human health issues, environmental destruction, tourism impacts, and all the other dreadful results of industrial wind. If you have a homeowners’ associations, make them aware of the danger so they can join the fight.
  4. Publicize your case. In the newspapers, TV and radio and video, on blogs and in nationwide petitions. Use good graphics. Go viral, worldwide. Develop a good professional website with lots of information and ways for viewers to participate. Community members should write op-eds and letters to the editor. A very powerful tool is frequent press releases that pass on news reports from National Wind Watch and other groups about the devastating impacts of industrial wind. These press releases should be sent to all relevant media outlets and local, state and national legislators.
  5. Do mailings to everyone. In Molokai we sent two mailings to all the island’s 2,700 addresses. The first mailer described the dangers of the project and included a survey with a stamped return envelope. We had a massive response, with 97% of responses against the project, and our group gained hundreds of new members. A year later we sent a second mailer with photo mockups showing how the turbines would tower over homes and landscapes. This mailer also included a bumper sticker which many residents then put on their cars.
  6. Be visible. Put up lots of signs, both homemade and professionally done. Put up billboards if you can. Professional signs show you mean business, and are taken more seriously.
  7. Find legislators who will help you. On the state level, Republicans are often more responsive and more concerned about the environment than traditionalist Democrats who have bought the idea that wind is environmental (or who are receiving contributions from wind companies).
  8. Litigate. Find every avenue to impair or slow the wind developers. Once the Washington industrial welfare subsidies are removed, industrial wind companies will vanish overnight.
  9. Get property value loss appraisals. Average losses of 40% or more are being reported; in Molokai, one of the reasons the landowner planning the project cancelled it was they estimated a 75% property value loss on their lands near the project. Publicize the loss of assessed value at county level, and how that will reduce tax revenues. In most cases, property value loss far exceeds any revenue the county might receive from the project.
  10. Civil disobedience. Politicians and energy companies are terrified of this. Don’t be afraid to go to jail to protect the land and homes you love. On Molokai we planned if necessary to start a hunger strike on the island, and there were people ready to starve to death to protect our island. The level of your commitment is equal to the level of your success.”

Read more on Mike Bond's official website.

Mike Bond's “Saving Paradise”